Tennessee quarterback Justin Worley (14) is sacked by Oregon defensive tackle Taylor Hart (66) during the second quarter of an NCAA college football game in Eugene, Ore., Saturday, Sept. 14, 2013. Oregon won the game 59-14. (AP Photo/Steve Dykes)

Auburn at LSU and Tennessee at Florida sounds like a big day in the Southeastern Conference.

Beyond the Deep South, though, those rivalries don’t quite resonate the way they did not so long ago, and it is part of the reason this week’s college football schedule is short on marquee matchups.

The Volunteers haven’t beaten the Gators since 2004, and No. 19 Florida is favored by more than two touchdowns to extend its winning streak in the series to nine games.

“We have to be the team that overachieves on Saturday,” said first-year Tennessee coach Butch Jones, whose Vols are coming off a 59-14 loss to Oregon.

Florida (1-1) had last week off, after losing at Miami the week before. It allowed the Gators to get some banged up players such as quarterback Jeff Driskel (knee), offensive linemen Jon Halapio (pectoral) and Tyler Moore (ankle) and cornerback Marcus Roberson (knee) healthy.

LSU has won five of the past six in the annual SEC West Tiger fight. Only Cam Newton’s one season at Auburn has produced a recent victory in the series for the War Eagle set.

Auburn is off to a 3-0 start in its first season rebuilding under coach Gus Malzahn, including last week’s 24-20 victory against Mississippi State on a late touchdown pass, so optimism abounds on the Plains.

A road trip to Death Valley, however, has brought the mood of many teams down.

“I’m real curious to see our team responds (on the road),” Malzahn said.

No. 6 LSU (3-0), like Florida, opens SEC play as a big favorite, thanks in large part to improved play at a position that’s been a trouble spot for several seasons, even with all the Tigers’ success.

Quarterback Zach Mettenberger is third in the nation in passer efficiency rating, with seven touchdown passes and no interceptions. Coach Les Miles credited new offensive coordinator Cam Cameron with Mettenberger’s improvement.

“I think Zach is seeing the reasons for the calls and what’s expected and has really embraced the work ethic that’s allowed him to enjoy practice, enjoy play call, and really enjoy the position that is quarterback,” Miles said. “It’s more leadership; it’s more strategic. It’s a thinking man’s position, and I think he’s enjoying it greatly.”

An upset in either of the SEC’s big rivalry games could have a real impact on the conference races and beyond.

The picks:

MAIN EVENT

No. 23 Arizona State (plus

7½) at No. 5 Stanford

First test for Cardinal ... STANFORD 31-21.

MARQUEE MATCHUP

Michigan State (plus 7)

at No. 22 Notre Dame

Irish defense has been more hype than production so far ... NOTRE DAME 21-17.

The Wolverines tried hard to get out of this road trip, but to no avail. Boilermakers put up a fight against Notre Dame, but Badgers should be salty after odd end at Arizona State. ULM pushed Baylor last season and, if nothing else, won’t shy away from trying to keep pace with the Bears.